If Jeb Bush did anything crazy in high school — besides going to Mexico and falling hopelessly in love — it will soon be revealed.

Boston Globe reporter Michael Kranish is said to have interviewed at least 30 people — mostly classmates — about the potential presidential candidate’s years at Phillips Academy Andover, about 25 miles north of Boston.

The prestigious school — where George Washington spoke in 1778 after Paul Revere designed its great seal — opened its confidential files to Kranish, which might include the record of Jeb’s probation for underage drinking, sources say.

Society bandleader Alex Donner, who was a year ahead of Jeb, told me, “He didn’t fit in that well. He wasn’t in the in-crowd, or the jock crowd. He hadn’t found himself yet.”

Jeb’s father, George H.W. Bush, was captain of the baseball team and “the most popular boy in the school.” Older brother George W. Bush was head cheerleader, which at Andover was more like class president and involved speaking at rallies.

“His father and his brother were such big deals there, Jeb had hard shoes to fill,” Donner said.

Another classmate, journalist Charlie Finch, told me the most remarkable chapter in Bush’s Andover career was the semester he spent in Mexico, where he met his future wife, Columba.

“It’s a love story,” Finch said.

Instead of going to Yale, where all the other Bushes went, Jeb went to the University of Texas. He and Columba married in Austin, Texas, in 1974.

Finch said, “If he hadn’t met Columba and gone back to Texas, his whole life might have turned out differently.”